Ford's incoming World Endurance Championship program has opened a back channel to Max Verstappen. Mark Rushbrook, the automaker's motorsports director, confirmed talks with the three-time F1 champion about a potential Hypercar seat when the factory Mustang debuts in WEC competition next season. Rushbrook stopped short of detailing timeline or commitment level, but the outreach is live.
Verstappen has spent the past six months signaling restlessness with grand prix racing's technical direction. He criticized the FIA's newly announced 2027 combustion-electric power split in a Thursday paddock scrum, calling the revised formula "more of the same weight problem." The Dutchman has been vocal about GT3 racing's appeal, specifically citing the category's Balance of Performance system as preferable to F1's spending arms race. His remarks follow a December test session in a BMW M4 GT3 at Yas Marina, arranged through his management and conducted outside Red Bull's contractual review.
Ford's Hypercar program represents a middle path. The manufacturer returns to prototype racing for the first time since its GT program ended in 2019, and WEC's cost-capped Hypercar class offers a different value proposition than F1's $140 million budget ceiling—which doesn't include driver salaries or marketing spend. Rushbrook's interest in Verstappen isn't just brand voltage. Ford competes against Ferrari, Porsche, Toyota, and Cadillac in a category where driver pedigree moves OEM internal allocation discussions. Landing an active F1 world champion would recalibrate Ford's negotiating position with IMSA and its own dealer network, which questions why the company isn't running in more visible American series.
Verstappen's Red Bull contract runs through 2028, but the deal includes performance clauses that activate if the team falls outside the top three in the Constructors' Championship for two consecutive seasons. Red Bull finished second in 2024. Christian Horner has publicly downplayed exit risk, though three senior engineers have left Milton Keynes since January, two bound for Aston Martin's expanded Silverstone technical center. Verstappen's father, Jos, has maintained a rotating dialogue with Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, separate from any Ford conversations but part of a broader pattern of optionality Max's camp is building outside the Red Bull ecosystem.
The timing matters because Ford's 2026 WEC roster must be finalized by Q3 2025 to meet homologation and sponsorship-deck deadlines. The manufacturer is expected to field two Hypercars under a factory banner, with driver pairings that balance LMP2 graduates and established prototype talent. Verstappen would almost certainly require a part-season arrangement if Red Bull remains competitive, limiting his WEC availability to non-conflicting weekends—Le Mans in June and possibly Spa in May. That structure has precedent: Fernando Alonso ran partial WEC campaigns while contracted to McLaren, and Ford's 2016-2019 GT program used rotating driver lineups across IMSA and WEC.
What makes this more than a branding exercise is Verstappen's documented interest in endurance formats. He has privately floated the idea of a post-F1 career in sportscars, per two team principals who have discussed the topic with him in the past year. GT3 remains his stated preference—Balance of Performance appeals to someone who came up through karting's spec-engine ranks—but Hypercar offers a Le Mans pathway without the political weight of a Ferrari or Porsche F1 commitment. Ford's program also runs through Team Multimatic, the Canadian engineering house that built the GT and maintains a low-profile operation outside the European prototype establishment. Verstappen's camp values that separation from the F1 media circuit.
The broader context is a three-time world champion at 27 with no obvious move inside F1 that improves his situation. Mercedes has George Russell locked through 2027 and Andrea Kimi Antonelli in the pipeline. Ferrari's 2026 car is unproven under the new power-unit formula Verstappen openly distrusts. McLaren has Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri signed long-term. Red Bull's technical flight risk and Honda's 2026 power-unit partnership with Aston Martin leave Verstappen's next contract negotiation—set to open in late 2026—without clear leverage. A partial WEC program gives him a public hedge and a private testing ground for life after grand prix racing, which his management has quietly gamed out with two different family offices exploring team ownership structures in GT3 and LMP2.
Ford's Rushbrook is expected in Bahrain for F1's March season opener, where paddock sightings with Verstappen's manager, Raymond Vermeulen, would carry more signal than any press release. The window for a 2026 partial deal closes in September when WEC finalizes its entry list. Le Mans 2026 runs June 14-15, between the Canadian and Spanish Grands Prix—a tight but navigable calendar gap if Red Bull's season is already decided by June, which happened in 2023.
The takeaway
Verstappen's WEC conversations are optionality engineering: public hedge against Red Bull decline, private test of post-F1 appetite for endurance formats that reward racecraft over budget.
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